December 11, 2016 – Active Anticipation

Thus far we have looked in-depth into 2 Advent themes that, when broken down into manageable chunks, can become useful for daily prayer and applicable to daily life. Advent teaches us to be a people of preparation. We await the coming of Jesus at the end of time. At the same time, by daily communicating with God, our prayer transforms us. We become aware of the gap between our will and God’s Will and as our prayer matures we begin to desire these two wills to become one. Mary’s fiat gives us a concrete and profound example of what this union looks like.

A few days ago, I talked about how Mary’s fiat compels her to action. This movement, from communion to action, is the focus of this week. One of the main themes of Advent is a feeling of anticipation. We as a people of faith are anticipating the coming of Jesus, both as an infant and at the end of time. We read about the Jewish people as they waited for the Messiah to come. Consider the following passage from today’s First Reading from the book of Isaiah:

Here is your God,
he comes with vindication;
with divine recompense
he comes to save you.
Then will the eyes of the blind be opened,
the ears of the deaf be cleared;
then will the lame leap like a stag,
then the tongue of the mute will sing (Isaiah 35:4b-6a)

We will know when God is coming by His actions. The blind will see, the deaf will hear, the lame will be healed and the mute will be able to speak.

Now let’s look at the Gospel. John the Baptist has sent some followers to Jesus to ask Him if He is the awaited one or if they are still anticipating the coming of God. Jesus’ response should ring a bell:

“Go and tell John what you hear and see:
the blind regain their sight,
the lame walk,
lepers are cleansed,
the deaf hear,
the dead are raised,
and the poor have the good news proclaimed to them (Matthew 11:4-6).

John’s followers were given the answer to their question not in words but in actions. They knew the Messiah by His fulfillment of the promises of God, by His actions.

By now we should be settled into our 3 minutes of prayer each day. It helps us stay prepared, maintain good prayer habits and gives us the opportunity to talk to God about any number of things while we grow our relationship with Him. This week, I would like to see how that prayer, this growing relationship, serves as the springboard for our actions. Our relationship with God is our foundation. How we choose to live it out is the house or actions that stand upon it.

Today, let’s consider our proverbial “front door.” This is the first thing that people encounter when they come to your home. I would liken the front door to our overall attitude and disposition. Are we a welcoming, joyful person? Are we reserved or guarded? Do we greet others even if they are strangers or do we keep to ourselves? Do we let a previous poor experience color the way we view the one we are in and in what way?

No matter what is going on in our lives, there is one feature that, according to Pope Francis, all Christians must endeavor to hang on their “front door.” This is joy. Today, spend your 3 minutes after your intentional Sign of the Cross reading these words by our pope and sincerely ask yourself if joy is what you display on your “front door.”

***Have you experienced God fulfilling a promise? Perhaps it came as an answer to prayer and perseverance? How does seeing the way God fulfilled His promises in the Bible give you hope for your life? Please feel free to share your experience, thoughts and offer support to one another in the comments, on Twitter with the #DailyGraces or on the Facebook page.

Welcome!

Kate Taliaferro is an Air Force wife, mom of 4 under 6. She enjoys homeschooling her two oldest while chasing her exuberant almost 3 year old and snuggling her sweet baby. She has a Masters in Religious Education and tries to find God's presence in all parts of her day, be it cooking, cleaning or just the everyday ordinary. Follow her blog, (link: dailygraces.net) Daily Graces to join her crazy, adventurous, God-filled family.